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Griffin Daily News
Egypt Forces
Raid Siani
By United Press International
Egypt said its airborne and
naval commandos swept across
the Gulf of Suez today and
raided Israeli positions along a
23-mile front of the Sinai
Peninsula—the first such Arab
raid since the 1967 Middle East
War.
A military communique, with
out giving specific details, said
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MIIHI
116 West Solomon Street Phone 227-5515
2
Thursday, Oct. 2, 1969
the commandos escaped after
the “completely successful”
attack that caused heavy
Israeli losses 40 to 63 miles
below Suez City on the gulf.
“The Egyptian claims are
entirely without any foundation
whatsoever,” said an Israeli
spokesman in Tel Aviv. He said
one Egyptian plane had
dropped bombs along the
Sinai’s west coast without doing
any damage.
This was the first raid
involving Egyptian naval com
mandos since the 1967 war.
Helicopter-r iding Egyptian com
mandos struck into the Sinai
Sunday, hitting along the
Mediterranean shore.
The Sunday raid was the first
of its kind and Egypt promised
more of the same to counter
almost daily Israeli air strikes
across the Suez Canal and the
Gulf of Suez.
Egypt said the targets in
today’s raid ranged from Ras
Matarm a 40 miles south of Suez
City to Ras Malab, 23 miles
farther down the coast.
The airborne commandos,
apparently in helicopters,
struck in surprise attacks, with
naval gunboats simultaneously
providing supporting fire, the
communique said.
“The mission carried out by
all these units was completely
successful,” the Egyptian an
nouncement said.
The target area was just
across the gulf from where
Israeli warplanes have been
bombing almost daily for the
past two weeks.
Georgia News
Gunman Flubs
Robbery Attempt
ATLANTA (UPl')- A lone
gunman panicked and fled from
the 10th Street branch of the
Citizens and Southern National
Bank Wednesday when a bank
official hesitated briefly about
cashing a $4,800 check.
“This is all the identification
I need,” said the gunman as
he walked behind the official’s
desk and flashed a pistol. “Fill
in the account, okay the check
and get it cashed. Don’t be a
hero,” he warned.
Apparently the robber got
nervous when the officer stall
ed. He demanded the bank of
ficer walk him to the front
door. Once there, the frustrated
holdup man opened it and fled
south on Peachtree Street.
Federal and state lawmen
joined city police in the inves
tigation.
Talmadge Tabs It
‘Small Comfort*
WASHINGTON (UPI)-Pres
ident Nixon’s troop withdrawals
will not placate the North Viet
namese or the Viet Cong but
might be “some small comfort
to American citizens who are
sick to death of the war,” Sen.
Herman Talmadge said in a
newsletter Wednesday.
The communists “know the
war is still being fought on their
terms and so far they haven’t
seen anything to make them
think otherwise,” said the jun
ior senator.
Talmadge went on to say Nix
on’s withdrawals still amount to
Protesters
At Albany High
Face Punishment
ALBANY, Ga. (UPI) -Al
bany High School principal
Harold McNabb promised only
minor punishment for some 150
picketing white students if they
returned to class today.
About 40 students walked out
Tuesday and more than twice
that number joined them
Wednesday from a total enroll
ment of about 950.
Negro students at Saturday’s
football game burned “Dixie”
sheet music under the spec
tators stands, and that appar
ently triggered the walkouts.
The demonstrations were
peaceful. Picketing students
carried American and Confed
erate flags and signs reading,
“equal rights for whites,” join
us now,” and “we need sup
port.”
McNabb said the students de
manded amnsety. He said they
would probably only get unex
cused absence chits if they were
back in school today.
He also said a bi-racial com
mittee, as requested by the
students, is being formed to
study school racial problems.
“I don’t know how we have
failed,” said McNabb who ex
plained that it was school policy
to treat black and white students
equally.
McNabb pointed out Albany
High allows black band mem
bers to remain silent during the
playing of “Dixie” at football
games and other school func
tions.
SPECIAL
at BUCKLES
CBIIWj
21 - Gnjlon
Heavy Gauge
GARBAGE
CANS
Also 26 and 31 gallon
in light and heavy weight.
BUCKLES
HARDWARE CO.
409 West Solomon St.
Phone 227-5503
Free Paved Parking
little more than a token gesture
but might indicate a willingness
to get out of Vietnam by 1971.
Dahlonega Curfew
Is Under Fire
DAHLONEGA, Ga. (UPI) -
Athens attorney Guy Scott said
Wednesday the 11 p. m. curfew
here was set to harrass the
nearby U. S. Army ranger
camp and was “clearly uncon
stitutional.”
Scott made the statement af
ter taking the case of a young
ranger charged with breaking
the curfew and illegal parking
edict.
Scott said Spec. 5 Howard B.
Oaks was arrested when his
car broke down in the town
square as he was returning to
camp from Gainesville last
weekend. Oaks was kept in cus
tody because he could not pay
the $25 bail, Scott said.
Other rangers have also com
plained about poor treatment in
this small north Georgia com
munity, Scott said.
BIG FIND
MARION, lowa (UPl)—There
is quite a bone to pick on a
farm near here.
Geologists from the Universi
ty of lowa said Tuesday they
are digging up the fossil
remains of an ice age bison, an
animal bigger than the modern
American bison.
“Finding an entire skeleton is
rare,” said Prof. Holmes
Semken.
LAST 3 BIG DAYS!
SALE CONTINUES THRU SATURDAY
Piiceb Jlo-uj- !)t'&
59c Rubbing Alcohol 16-oz. 2 for 59c 98c Fresh Breath Spray 2 for 98c
98c Children’s Cough Syrup 2 for 98c 69c Walgreen Aspirin 100’c 2 for 69c
$1.69 Milk Bath with cold 98c Throat Loz. with “C” 2 for 98c
Creme. 2 for $1.69 __ _ . . , __
98c Saccharin 1000 gr. 2 for 98c
79c Alcohol , ... , • -
with Wintergreen 2 for 79c 98c Stendent Mouthwash 2 for 98c
98c Orlis Mouthwash 2 for 98c 98c Fresh Breath
Mouthwash 2 for 98c
98c Keller Mouthwash 2 for 98c __ ..... ...
75c Milk of Magnesia
85c Smoker Tooth Paste 2 for 85c 16-oz. 2 for 75c
98c PoDo Speed Shave 2 for 98c 98c Perfection Hand '
$1.29 Formula 20 Shampoo Lotion 2 for 98c
5-oz. tube 2 for $1.29 $1.29 Family Spray
ei no et» > nu. -u. Deodorant 7-oz. 2 for $1.29
Hexachloraphene 2 for $1.98 $1.29 Hillrose K Glycerine
$1.35 Lord Briargage After GeflJ-oz. 2 for $1.29
Shave Lotion 2 for $1.35
$1.50 Lord Brairgate
$1.98 Multiple Vitamins Cologne 2 for $1.50
with iron. 100’s 2 for $1.98
$5.19 Bente B-Complex
$2.69 Aytinal Multi-Vitamins Vitamins 100’s 2 for $5.19
100 ’’’ 2 for $2,69 $5.49 Super Geriatric
$1.29 Vit. “C” chewable oranve Vit -
flavor lOOmgm 2 for $1.29 $34 9 Lhr er & i ron
$6.98 Olavite M Therapeutic Tablets 2 for $3.19
formula Vit. & Min. 2 for $6.98 SI.OO Bubbling Bath Oil 2 for SI.OO
SPECIALS
Plush Animals — Pigs, Dogs, Tigers, Dinosaurs $3.98 value — now $3.00 ea.
24 Hour Appliance on-off timer $7.95 Model now $5.33
$12.95 Mod Fashion Link leather wrist watches SB.BB
Glassware imported from Italy — 12-piece collection 88c each
Makeup Mirror $8.95, petite model, 3 colors $5.95
Seamless Hosiery, regularly $1.49 now 99c
Plastic Dust Pans 2 for 25c
Christmas Cards, all alike boxed 25’s, reg. $1.50 now SI.OO
Christmas Bows, 25 pre-tied, bagged, reg. 99c now 66c
Regent collection Christmas Cards, 50 assorted, reg. SI.BB now 98c
Jesse’s Pharmacy
SHOP DURING OUR BIG 2 SALE
Come in and shop the many bargains in every
department during our BIG 2 SALE. Big savings,
including many items space does not
permit us to show.
fahtastic savhk» hm you when you wr m
' • • • • ••• If
Criminal Court
Jurors Drawn
Criminal court jurors who
will serve during the second
week of the October term of
Spalding Superior Court have
been drawn. The criminal
session will open at 9 a.m. on
Oct. 13 in the courthouse with
Judge Andrew Whalen Jr.
presiding.
Jurors will be:
Claude M. Dukes, Roy Car
den, H. E. Bethune, Dan Dun
can, H. L. Harwell, Wyman P.
Merritt, Robert P. Scroggins,
Myrtice W. Blackmon, Bennie
F. Blackmon, G. Wayne Gibson.
Alton Leonard Goodson, H. R.
Rowell, Edward Hiers, Lewis
Morgan, Horace Miller, Oliver
Jenkins, Jack W. Kent, Earnest
T. Woodruff, Stella Dukes,
Homer A. Rhodes.
Herman C. McKemie Jr.,
Mrs. Flossie Willis, R. P.
Hutcherson, Roy T. Carden,
Buel J. Blalock, Mrs. Roy
Initial service
CHEYENNE, Wyo. (UPI) -
The major service provided by
the Wyoming Stock Growers
Association is brand inspection.
Brand inspection is conducted
for the better protection of the
state’s livestock industry, to ob
tain uniformity of inspection,
and for the purpose of identi
fication of cattle.
Dawn, Lewis Coggins, David
Lee Walker, J. W. Tate.
John Lee Gill, J. E. Duke, L.
Calvin Sledge, L. W. Reeves,
Vernon Ray Stephens, M. C.
Grubbs, Calton H. Ahl, John L.
Foster Jr., Walter C. Futral Jr.,
J. D. Dunn, Charles A. Collier.
Mrs. Lucy Payne, Ray B.
Cody, Anthony Ellis Jr., Robert
Lee Mays, Richard Smith,
Marvin E. Wilder, Preston
Newton, Richard L. Pitts, R. S.
Chapman.
Paul Mangham, Robert T.
Jones, Ernest D. Morgan, Oscar
Jones, Jimmy Key Johnson,
Carl F. Moore, Phillip Head,
Leroy Alston, Joe H. Coggins,
Lamar Purser.
Tune Up With CARGO
• Automatic Transmissions
Stops leaks, slipping and
wear.
• Crankcase—Valve Lifters
Frees lifters — Cuts
Friction
• Carburetor—Fuel system
Removes carbon and gum
for fuel economy, power
and pep.
Wholesale and Retail
Baker American Service
Broadway at N. Hill St.
Phone 227-2930